A call to hope: Supporting the Holy Land

By Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz, D.D.
The Passion of the Lord Jesus unfolds before us over the next week, beginning with the Palm Sunday commemoration this weekend. This year the passion narrative from the Gospel of Luke invites us spiritually to accompany the Lord from his triumphal entry into Jerusalem, through the Last Supper and onto his sacrificial death on the Cross. Upon departing from our churches this weekend, we leave the door to the resurrection yet unopened so that we can wholeheartedly renew our understanding of the impact of sin, suffering, violence and death that in turn reveals the power of the resurrection.
The added dimension to this year’s Holy Week observance is the relentless war that rains down destruction and misery upon the inhabitants of the land where Jesus walked the earth and loved the people of his time. Many who suffer such unspeakable crimes against humanity are our Palestinian brothers and sisters in the Catholic faith.

Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz, D.D.

Therefore, the traditional Good Friday collection, always critically important, takes on an added urgency this year. The following excerpts are from the Franciscan Friars’ annual Good Friday letter of appeal to all of the arch(dioceses) in the United States. “This Jubilee Year is designated as a Year of Hope. Indeed, hope is a necessary virtue in a land marked by cycles of violence and relative calm. Gaza itself has been reduced to rubble. Missiles have hit many other places as well. People across the region are tasked with rebuilding homes, schools, hospitals and even churches.”
The holy places that mark the locations of our Lord’s life, death and resurrection are described as the fifth Gospel that anchor in time and place the inspired texts of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. They are destinations of pilgrimage for believers and non-believers alike, while providing a means of livelihood for the people who have inhabited the land for centuries. They have fallen on desperate times.
“Many of our faithful earn their living from pilgrimages. Still repaying debts from the pandemic shutdown, they found themselves soon assaulted by war. Now, already in debt, many have again lost jobs. Fear and despair have driven many Christians to leave the Holy Land: over the past century, Christians have gone from 23% to less than 2% of the population. And more than 90 Christian families have already left Bethlehem since Oct. 7, having lost hope in a good future for them in the land where Jesus and the church were born.”
May our prayer and generosity this Good Friday express our love for the people who deeply desire to remain on their ancestral lands. “The Collection supports the work of the Franciscans in the sacred shrines, ministers to the parishes, provides formation and education in communities and schools, and cares for the basic needs of people in the Holy Land. During such a difficult time, where we must rebuild not only buildings but so many broken lives, your support for this important collection is essential.”
In this vein, Holy Week is an opportunity to shed light upon the Knights and Dames of the Holy Sepulcher whose unique mission is to support the church’s presence and ministries in the Holy Land throughout the year. More specifically, it is the only lay institution of the Vatican State charged with the task of providing for the needs of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem and of all the activities and initiatives to support the Christian presence in the Holy Land. The contributions made by its members are therefore the Patriarchal institutions’ main source. The call to holiness marked by fidelity to the Holy Father and the teaching of the Catholic Church is an essential characteristic of the Order. Arising from the member’s relationship with the crucified and risen Lord is the call to sustain and aid the charitable, cultural and social works and institutions of the Catholic Church in the Holy Land, particularly those of and in the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, with which the Order maintains traditional ties. In general, the members are encouraged to support the preservation and propagation of the Faith in those lands and promote interest in this work not only among Catholics scattered throughout the world, who are united in charity by the symbol of the Order, but also among all other Christians.
May the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ bring renew the face of the earth through the light of the Gospel proclaimed to the nations. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem!